This document provides instructions for a critical review assignment for an art appreciation class at North Lake College. Students are asked to visit one of several local art museums and complete a two-part assignment. For part one, students must write a 300-word critical review of their favorite piece of art from the museum visit, describing the piece, analyzing the artist's intent, and interpreting their own reaction. For part two, students must complete a worksheet selecting and describing three other pieces of art from the museum based on criteria of chronology, style, artistic developments, and cultural context. Guidelines are provided on how to discuss the visual elements and principles of design in the pieces.
Art museums and art galleries are two different types of entitie.docxssusera34210
Art museums and art galleries are two different types of entities.
The primary difference is that while one goes to an art museum to view art and learn about art from an educational or cultural experience; one goes to an art gallery to view art, discover new artists, possibly from the perspective of purchasing the art.
Most museums are funded by governments, foundations, and corporate and private donors, and they are operated on a non-for-profit basis. Galleries seek to make profit and gain exposure for themselves and the artists they represent.Art galleries, are usually small businesses or centers that exhibit art for the purposes of promoting and selling art. One would typically visit an art gallery to discover an artist, possibly with an interest in buying the art. Art museums, on the other hand, are larger and are intended for education and cultural experiences. One would typically visit an art museum to view and study its permanent collection or to visit a touring exhibit of works on loan from another museum or institution.
There are 2 parts
to your Museum Critical Review assignment to be completed after visiting one or more of the following museum websites*
:
Dallas Museum of Art
https://dma.org/
Nasher Sculpture Center
https://www.nashersculpturecenter.org/
Meadows Museum of Art
www.meadowsmuseumdallas.org/
Crow Collection
www.crowcollection.org
Kimbell Art Museum
www.kimbellart.org
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
www.themodern.org
Amon Carter Museum of American Art
www.cartermuseum.org
Google Arts and Culture Collections
https://artsandculture.google.com/partner
*Not all of the museums will have the diversity of time periods that you will need to complete the assignment. You may have to visit more than one of the listed museum websites if you choose one of the more time or region specific museums.
ARTS 1301 NLC Art Appreciation Museum Critical Review Assignment and Worksheet
I hope you are inspired by your visit to the museum websites.
This assignment is designed to meet both
Communication and Social Responsibility Student Learning Objectives.
There are 2 parts
to your Museum Critical Review assignment to be completed after visiting one or more of the following museum websites*
:
· Dallas Museum of Art
www.dma.org
· Nasher Sculpture Center
www.nashersculpturecenter.org
· Meadows Museum of Art
www.meadowsmuseumdallas.org/
· Crow Collection
www.crowcollection.org
· Kimbell Art Museum
www.kimbellart.org
· Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
www.themodern.org
· Amon Carter Museum of American Art
www.cartermuseum.org
· Google Arts and Culture Collections
https://artsandculture.google.com/partner
*Not all of the museums will have the diversity of time periods that you will need to complete the assignment. You may have to visit more than one of the listed museum websites if you choose to go to one of the more time or region specific museums. Your instructor may choose to.
Team Gallery ReviewPRESENTED BY RUPESH DHAKA.docxbradburgess22840
Team Gallery Review
PRESENTED BY :
RUPESH DHAKAL
PROFFESOR RICHARD MILLER
ARTS -1301-77204
DATE : 09/15/2019
z
COMMUTER 2
Commuter 2 is a painting made by Kendall Stallings. It is the art known as acrylic on canvas. The size of the art is 48 * 36 inches. This work was created in 2014 and it can be used as an artwork to get knowledge about canvas art.
z
DALLAS ART GALLERY
Location : DALLAS ART GALLERY
DALLAS, TEXAS
DATE : 09/14/2019
TIME : 11:30 AM
The above mentioned art gallery has many more art collection to have a look and research about it .
z
COMMUTER 2
Kendal Stallings is an American artist who began his art instruction in 1965 at the age of 11. In this art the artists intent is to show the viewers that the emotion of a person while travelling. The intend of the artist is to let the viewer to know about the journey that a commuter has to travel daily through his art.
z
DESIGN PRINCIPLES AND VISUAL ELEMENTS
In this art the artist describes about the various principle of art with the help of visual elements. The art uses the proper shape and size for his art. The use of proper texture can also be seen in the art. The use of proper color is also seen in the art. The artist have used appropriate visual elements so that the viewers can have better knowledge about the commuter. The proper shape of the person and the bicycle is shown by the artist so that the viewer can easily identify it. The proper texture for the person sitting in the bicycle is used. Likewise the distinguishable color is used by the artist which is black. In this way the design principles are followed by the artist to make the art meaningful.
z
5
Art comparison
Boy Bitten By a Lizard
Commuter 2
In this art the artist is trying to describes about poisonous attack of salamander over the god. This is a big art work with lots of meaning in it. There is use of different colors in this art. The use of appropriate texture is difficult to see.ßß
In this art the artist describes about the journey and path of a commuter. It is not so vast art work. There is use of monochromatic color only. The use of appropriate texture can be seen easily.
z
CONCLUSION
In the conclusion I would like to say that the gallery review assignment helped to get a chance to look over different types of paintings and art works that were on the gallery. It also helped to get knowledge about different types of artist and their art work.
z
TEAM GALLERY REVIEW
COMMUNICATION SKILLS VALUE RUBRIC
The class will be randomly assigned into teams of 3 or more students.
Within a team, each Team Member will select 1 work of art to be found in an approved professional art
gallery. Each Team Member will be creating a power point with images of each of these art objects. The team
may have to seek permission to photograph the object from the gallery or artist. Identify and describe these
works of art based on the specifications given in the rubric.
The team will a.
Museum paper Rubric Formal Analysis of Artwork Points 401..docxgilpinleeanna
Museum paper Rubric: Formal Analysis of Artwork
Points: 40
1. Suggested museums: The Hammer, The Broad, Museum of Contemporary Art, L.A., Norton Simon in Pasadena, The J. Paul Getty Museum (also the Getty Villa), L.A. County Museum of Art on Wilshire Blvd (LAMA), The Bowers Museum, Santa Ana, Laguna Beach Art Museum. Visit one of the suggested museums or if you have another in mind please talk to me first.
2. Pick one art object of interest to do your analysis.
3. Attach the museum ticket stub and picture of the artwork to your paper. If there is no ticket, attach a picture of you next to the artwork.
4. Minimum 3 pages, maximum 5 pages, 12 font, double spaced. Follow the rubric and incorporate the information listed below.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
9pts Description: How does the artwork look like?
3 pts. label (title, artist, date)
6 pts. describe the artwork, include the dimensions, color, medium, etc... Use appropriate terms and concepts in the Principle of Design in your description.
15pts Analysis: What does it mean?
5pts. Artistic movement (e.g. Impressionism) or culture (e.g. China) it came from. Explain how this fits into the analysis of the artwork.
5pts. Context: historical, social, religious, mythological. Explain how the context effects the interpretation of the artwork
5pts. Interpretation: please research to find the meaning behind the artwork
and incorporate into your thesis
5 pts. Personal judgment: Why did you choose it and why did you like it?
11pts Organization of paper: Use MLA citation style
3pts. citation page -3 sources (separate Work cited pager)
3pts. citations within the body of the essay- minimum 3 citations in the body of the essay
5pts. organization of paper, citation format, grammar and spelling
(e.g. reliable, reputable sources: text books, on-line source- university library, museum website, museum literature). Please use MLA citation style and bibliography/work cited. You must incorporate at least 3 citations in the body of the report. Bibliography/work cited page is on a separate page and is not included in the 3-page minimum (Do not cite from Wikipedia) ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Excellent: original and thoughtful work that is professionally executed; no typographical or grammatical errors; strong, clear, coherent, and compelling arguments; addresses or acknowledges obvious objections to the arguments; scrupulous attention to crediting sources of ideas and facts that are not the author’s own
Good: Well done work, but not particularly original or thoughtful; a few typographical or grammatical errors are present; work lacks some clarity or coherence in thought; fails to address some seemingly obvious objections to the argumentation; some crediting of sources missing; sources of facts are weak (e.g., ...
Art museums and art galleries are two different types of entitie.docxssusera34210
Art museums and art galleries are two different types of entities.
The primary difference is that while one goes to an art museum to view art and learn about art from an educational or cultural experience; one goes to an art gallery to view art, discover new artists, possibly from the perspective of purchasing the art.
Most museums are funded by governments, foundations, and corporate and private donors, and they are operated on a non-for-profit basis. Galleries seek to make profit and gain exposure for themselves and the artists they represent.Art galleries, are usually small businesses or centers that exhibit art for the purposes of promoting and selling art. One would typically visit an art gallery to discover an artist, possibly with an interest in buying the art. Art museums, on the other hand, are larger and are intended for education and cultural experiences. One would typically visit an art museum to view and study its permanent collection or to visit a touring exhibit of works on loan from another museum or institution.
There are 2 parts
to your Museum Critical Review assignment to be completed after visiting one or more of the following museum websites*
:
Dallas Museum of Art
https://dma.org/
Nasher Sculpture Center
https://www.nashersculpturecenter.org/
Meadows Museum of Art
www.meadowsmuseumdallas.org/
Crow Collection
www.crowcollection.org
Kimbell Art Museum
www.kimbellart.org
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
www.themodern.org
Amon Carter Museum of American Art
www.cartermuseum.org
Google Arts and Culture Collections
https://artsandculture.google.com/partner
*Not all of the museums will have the diversity of time periods that you will need to complete the assignment. You may have to visit more than one of the listed museum websites if you choose one of the more time or region specific museums.
ARTS 1301 NLC Art Appreciation Museum Critical Review Assignment and Worksheet
I hope you are inspired by your visit to the museum websites.
This assignment is designed to meet both
Communication and Social Responsibility Student Learning Objectives.
There are 2 parts
to your Museum Critical Review assignment to be completed after visiting one or more of the following museum websites*
:
· Dallas Museum of Art
www.dma.org
· Nasher Sculpture Center
www.nashersculpturecenter.org
· Meadows Museum of Art
www.meadowsmuseumdallas.org/
· Crow Collection
www.crowcollection.org
· Kimbell Art Museum
www.kimbellart.org
· Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
www.themodern.org
· Amon Carter Museum of American Art
www.cartermuseum.org
· Google Arts and Culture Collections
https://artsandculture.google.com/partner
*Not all of the museums will have the diversity of time periods that you will need to complete the assignment. You may have to visit more than one of the listed museum websites if you choose to go to one of the more time or region specific museums. Your instructor may choose to.
Team Gallery ReviewPRESENTED BY RUPESH DHAKA.docxbradburgess22840
Team Gallery Review
PRESENTED BY :
RUPESH DHAKAL
PROFFESOR RICHARD MILLER
ARTS -1301-77204
DATE : 09/15/2019
z
COMMUTER 2
Commuter 2 is a painting made by Kendall Stallings. It is the art known as acrylic on canvas. The size of the art is 48 * 36 inches. This work was created in 2014 and it can be used as an artwork to get knowledge about canvas art.
z
DALLAS ART GALLERY
Location : DALLAS ART GALLERY
DALLAS, TEXAS
DATE : 09/14/2019
TIME : 11:30 AM
The above mentioned art gallery has many more art collection to have a look and research about it .
z
COMMUTER 2
Kendal Stallings is an American artist who began his art instruction in 1965 at the age of 11. In this art the artists intent is to show the viewers that the emotion of a person while travelling. The intend of the artist is to let the viewer to know about the journey that a commuter has to travel daily through his art.
z
DESIGN PRINCIPLES AND VISUAL ELEMENTS
In this art the artist describes about the various principle of art with the help of visual elements. The art uses the proper shape and size for his art. The use of proper texture can also be seen in the art. The use of proper color is also seen in the art. The artist have used appropriate visual elements so that the viewers can have better knowledge about the commuter. The proper shape of the person and the bicycle is shown by the artist so that the viewer can easily identify it. The proper texture for the person sitting in the bicycle is used. Likewise the distinguishable color is used by the artist which is black. In this way the design principles are followed by the artist to make the art meaningful.
z
5
Art comparison
Boy Bitten By a Lizard
Commuter 2
In this art the artist is trying to describes about poisonous attack of salamander over the god. This is a big art work with lots of meaning in it. There is use of different colors in this art. The use of appropriate texture is difficult to see.ßß
In this art the artist describes about the journey and path of a commuter. It is not so vast art work. There is use of monochromatic color only. The use of appropriate texture can be seen easily.
z
CONCLUSION
In the conclusion I would like to say that the gallery review assignment helped to get a chance to look over different types of paintings and art works that were on the gallery. It also helped to get knowledge about different types of artist and their art work.
z
TEAM GALLERY REVIEW
COMMUNICATION SKILLS VALUE RUBRIC
The class will be randomly assigned into teams of 3 or more students.
Within a team, each Team Member will select 1 work of art to be found in an approved professional art
gallery. Each Team Member will be creating a power point with images of each of these art objects. The team
may have to seek permission to photograph the object from the gallery or artist. Identify and describe these
works of art based on the specifications given in the rubric.
The team will a.
Museum paper Rubric Formal Analysis of Artwork Points 401..docxgilpinleeanna
Museum paper Rubric: Formal Analysis of Artwork
Points: 40
1. Suggested museums: The Hammer, The Broad, Museum of Contemporary Art, L.A., Norton Simon in Pasadena, The J. Paul Getty Museum (also the Getty Villa), L.A. County Museum of Art on Wilshire Blvd (LAMA), The Bowers Museum, Santa Ana, Laguna Beach Art Museum. Visit one of the suggested museums or if you have another in mind please talk to me first.
2. Pick one art object of interest to do your analysis.
3. Attach the museum ticket stub and picture of the artwork to your paper. If there is no ticket, attach a picture of you next to the artwork.
4. Minimum 3 pages, maximum 5 pages, 12 font, double spaced. Follow the rubric and incorporate the information listed below.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
9pts Description: How does the artwork look like?
3 pts. label (title, artist, date)
6 pts. describe the artwork, include the dimensions, color, medium, etc... Use appropriate terms and concepts in the Principle of Design in your description.
15pts Analysis: What does it mean?
5pts. Artistic movement (e.g. Impressionism) or culture (e.g. China) it came from. Explain how this fits into the analysis of the artwork.
5pts. Context: historical, social, religious, mythological. Explain how the context effects the interpretation of the artwork
5pts. Interpretation: please research to find the meaning behind the artwork
and incorporate into your thesis
5 pts. Personal judgment: Why did you choose it and why did you like it?
11pts Organization of paper: Use MLA citation style
3pts. citation page -3 sources (separate Work cited pager)
3pts. citations within the body of the essay- minimum 3 citations in the body of the essay
5pts. organization of paper, citation format, grammar and spelling
(e.g. reliable, reputable sources: text books, on-line source- university library, museum website, museum literature). Please use MLA citation style and bibliography/work cited. You must incorporate at least 3 citations in the body of the report. Bibliography/work cited page is on a separate page and is not included in the 3-page minimum (Do not cite from Wikipedia) ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Excellent: original and thoughtful work that is professionally executed; no typographical or grammatical errors; strong, clear, coherent, and compelling arguments; addresses or acknowledges obvious objections to the arguments; scrupulous attention to crediting sources of ideas and facts that are not the author’s own
Good: Well done work, but not particularly original or thoughtful; a few typographical or grammatical errors are present; work lacks some clarity or coherence in thought; fails to address some seemingly obvious objections to the argumentation; some crediting of sources missing; sources of facts are weak (e.g., ...
Final Project InformationSan Francisco Museum of Modern Art.docxlmelaine
Final Project Information
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Minnesota Art Project – SF Galleries
Final Project Review of the essay format and required content.
Include the following concepts in your paper:
FINAL PROJECT: Written Visual Analysis/ Role of the Artist
DUE: Reference the due date on Canvas- If you do not complete the final project essay you will not pass the class.
Be sure to let me know if you have any questions.
Select a twentieth {1900’s} or twenty-first-century {2000’s} and their work being exhibited at a local museum.
I recommend the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), or any other major museum or gallery that is available to you. If you plan to go to a different museum or gallery, it is required you check in with me to get approval to go to a different museum.
Once you pick the artist, include and reference the four types of investigation Process of Visual Analyze, and explain what Role (out of the four roles) your artist identifies with during their creative process and concepts presented in their exhibition. Also include a biography on the artist in the introduction of your essay. Be sure to be thoughtful with your essays conclusion, {closing paragraph}, it is best to summarize the main points, considerations and concepts covered in your essay.
If you have an Oakland library card, or sign up for one you can get 2 free tickets to SFMOMA.
Here is the information:
You can use this website- https://oaklandlibrary.discoverandgo.net/ and get 2 free adult tickets for SFMOMA.
1) Artist name - Dianne Jones
2) The name of the work – Mission Bay Facing Northeast
3) The date the work was made – June 2008
4) Size of the artwork – 96 in x 120 in
5) Materials / medium - Chromogenic Color Print
6) Technique – created with a 4x5 large format camera, long exposure
7) Does it have any apparent function – Fine Art Photography Genre
Format the images with the assessment of physical properties, review the sample included in the PowerPoint that discusses the final project requirements.
One image/artwork page per, and the other pages would be your written text.
Artist name - Dianne Jones
The name of the work – Avenal Prison
The date the work was made – May 2012
Size of the artwork – 60 in x 60 in
Materials / medium - Chromogenic Color Print
Technique – created with a 4x5 large format camera, long exposure
Does it have any apparent function - Fine Art Photography Genre
Artist name - Dianne Jones
The name of the work – Mission Bay Facing South
The date the work was made – May 2002
Size of the artwork – 50 in x 60 in
Materials / medium - Chromogenic Color Print
Technique – created with a 4x5 large format camera, long exposure
Does it have any apparent function – Fine Art Photography Genre
Essay requirements:
Double-spaced 6 to 7 pages, which includes the images and the assessment of physical properties.
One image/artwork page per, and the other pages would be your written text.
Include a biogr ...
1 ART 101 FORM AND IDEA MUSEUM ES.docxmayank272369
1
ART 101:
FORM AND IDEA
MUSEUM ESSAY
All students will be required to visit the Tampa Museum of Art, the St. Petersburg Museum of Fine Arts, the
Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, or the Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota. Students will write a minimum
1500 word research paper (approx. 5 pages in length) based on one artwork of their choosing from the
museum to investigate in further detail. The completed paper is due at the beginning of class on the assigned
due date (see course syllabus for deadlines).
This assignment will require students to a thoughtful analysis based on accepted research as well as your own
developed point of view. Completed essays will be sustained thesis-driven interpretations of a single artwork
based on scholarly research (three sources minimum are required).
When selecting your artwork, pick the one that appeals to you and that you want to further examine. (Keep in
mind that you may want to select an object that has already had significant scholarly research within art
history.) A brief visual analysis of the selected artwork will ultimately support your thesis and lend credence to
your research. Meaning, your discussion of the artist’s selection and use of the visual elements and principles
of design should connect to your broader knowledge of style and pictorial culture, as we have discussed them
in class lecture. Your analysis should also move from description to interpretation as it relates to your central
argument – i.e., the particular qualities of the medium (ceramic, sculpture, painting, etc.) and how this relates
to the artist’s content or culture; how the visual elements found in the artwork reflect (or were affected by)
important cultural values found in the society in which it was made; how the work confronts the human
condition or experience of its culture; the expressive significance of formal elements, spatial design, or motifs
and their interaction; or how the artist has used visual elements to communicate a particular
message/experience to his/her viewers.
MUSEUM INFORMATION
For more information on the Tampa Museum of Art, its location, hours of operation and collections, please see
its website: http://tampamuseum.org. College student admission (with ID) is FREE, or Pay-as-you-will
admission on Fridays between 4–8 PM.
For more information on the St. Petersburg Museum of Fine Arts, its location, hours of operation and
collections, please see its website: http://www.fine-arts.org. Regular student admission (with ID) is $10, and
$5 after 5:00 PM on Thursdays.
For more information on the Salvador Dali Museum, its location, hours of operation and collections, please
see its website: http://thedali.org. Regular student admission (with ID) is $15 and is $10 after 5:00 PM on
Thursdays. Note: on-site parking at the Dali costs $10, but is within walk-able distance of downtown parking.
For more information on the Ringling Museum of Arts, its l ...
AssignmentAnalytical paperAcademic essay – academic tone of l.docxssuser562afc1
Assignment:
Analytical paper
Academic essay – academic tone of language, structure (argumentation for a point to present evidence and the research, argue through and supporting the ideas with the topic that I have chosen which will be in the conclusion, introduction what I want to achieve) the structure depends on the analysis of the subject.
1 theme and explore it and focus on 3 pieces of art from different genres (one sculpture, one film one piece of music e.g.)
In conclusion, state my findings.
Introduction: state what I want to prove or analyze. Introduce the theme that ive chosen.
3 different genres to support my argument.
What does it say about the time it was produced, theme, how our society is today? Identify this in the work.
Reference painting, film etc
Referencing is very important. APA.
Put the pieces of art in the essay (in order so the reader can see the e.g. painting, sculpture, poem)
Assignment:
Analytical paper
Academic essay
–
academic tone of language, structure (argumentation for a
point to present evidence and the research, argue through and supporting the
ideas with the topic that
I ha
ve chosen which will be in the conclusion,
introduction what I want to achieve) the structure depends on the analysis of the
subject.
1
theme
a
n
d
explore it and focus on
3 pieces of art from different genres
(one
sculpture, one film one piece of music e.g
.)
In conclusion, state my findings.
Introduction: state what I want to prove or analyze. Introduce the theme that
ive chosen.
3 different
genres
to support my argument.
What does it say about the time it was produced, theme, how our society is
today? Id
entify this in the work.
Reference
painting, film
etc
Referencing is very important. APA.
Put the pieces of art in the essay (in order so the reader can see the e.g. painting,
sculpture, poem)
Assignment:
Analytical paper
Academic essay – academic tone of language, structure (argumentation for a
point to present evidence and the research, argue through and supporting the
ideas with the topic that I have chosen which will be in the conclusion,
introduction what I want to achieve) the structure depends on the analysis of the
subject.
1 theme and explore it and focus on 3 pieces of art from different genres (one
sculpture, one film one piece of music e.g.)
In conclusion, state my findings.
Introduction: state what I want to prove or analyze. Introduce the theme that
ive chosen.
3 different genres to support my argument.
What does it say about the time it was produced, theme, how our society is
today? Identify this in the work.
Reference painting, film etc
Referencing is very important. APA.
Put the pieces of art in the essay (in order so the reader can see the e.g. painting,
sculpture, poem)
for these questions please be sure to use a standard essay format; introduction, body and conclusion.
Essay
Please complete the following four essay questions. In your answer ...
3-4 pages not including referencesDetailsFor your Individual P.docxssuser47f0be
3-4 pages not including references
Details:
For your Individual Project assignment, you will compare and contrast a work of art in a specific classification (Renaissance or Gothic) appearing on a WEBSITE with a work of art in your TEXTBOOK of the same classification. You can choose either two Renaissance paintings, two Renaissance sculptures, or two Gothic Cathedrals to discuss (two works in total). You may not discuss works that you have already discussed in another assignment.
1. To begin your project, explore the following websites classifications for your individual essay.
A. Visit the following Web sites to review Renaissance art. Links to these Web sites are available through the unit Resources List, in Course Materials.
The Vatican Museums
ArtLex – Earlier Renaissance Art
ArtLex – Later Renaissance Art
OR
B. Visit these Web sites for Gothic Cathedrals. Links to these Web sites are available through the unit Resources List, in Course Materials.
Chartres Cathedral
A Digital Archive of Architecture – High Gothic
Earthlore Gothic Dreams – Cathedral Architecture
2. Write the Individual Project (3–4 pages not including references):
Using the terminology and concepts you are learning for evaluating art, including materials used, style, meaning, and symbolism, and any other aesthetic issues, compare and contrast ONE of the selected works from the selected websites classification with a DIFFERENT work of art of the same classification from your TEXTBOOK . For example, compare two paintings from the Renaissance period or two gothic cathedrals. Use the following instructions to construct your paper:
For each of the works of art, describe and compare attributes of the works by following the guidelines below to structure your essay.
1. What is the FORM of the work?
Is it a two-dimensional or three-dimensional work of art?
What materials are used?
What techniques or processes are used to create the artwork?
What colors are used?
Describe the use of line, shape, texture, value, color, and balance.
2. Does the work of art have SUBJECT MATTER?
If so, what is literally depicted?
Is the work of art REPRESENTATIONAL, ABSTRACT, or NONOBJECTIVE?
3. What is the CONTENT?
What does it mean or represent?
What is the artist's message?
Is symbolism used? If so, what is the meaning?
What is the context of the artwork?
What is the function of the artwork?
What traditional role of the artist is exemplified?
4. Explain how the works of art fit into the context of the time period.
Keep in mind that only art works that fit into the period of Middle Ages - Renaissance (created between 1350–1520
CE) will be accepted
.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
B. Required Discussion Board assignment.
Two criteria used to judge the quality of a work are craft (how well an artwork was made) and communication (the uniqueness of the artist's vision and its message or meaning). Michelangelo Buonarroti and Leonar.
Visit a museum or gallery exhibition or attend a theater or musi.docxdavieec5f
Visit a museum or gallery exhibition or attend a theater or musical performance before the end of Week 10. The activity (museum or performance) should have content that fits our course well. Have fun doing this.
Write a two to three (2-3) page report (500-750 words) that describes your experience.
Clearly identify the event location, date attended, the attendees, and your initial reaction upon arriving at the event.
Provide specific information and a description of at least two (2)
pieces
(e.g., art, exhibits, music, etc.).
Provide a summary of the event and describe your overall reaction after attending the event.
Use at least the class text as a reference (additional sources are fine, not necessary unless required by your content). Your report should include connections you make between things observed in your activity and things learned in the course and text.
Note:
Submit your cultural activity choice to the instructor for approval before the end of Week 5 (earlier is even better). Look for guidance from the instructor for how or where to make your proposal. You may also seek advice from your instructor (provide your town/state or zip code) for a good activity in your general area.
Visiting a Museum
It makes sense to approach a museum the way a seasoned traveler approaches visiting a city for the first time. Find out what there is available to see. In the museum, find out what sort of exhibitions are currently housed in the museum and start with the exhibits that interest you.
If there is a travelling exhibition, it’s always a good idea to see it while you have the chance. Then, if you have time, you can look at other things in the museum.
Every effort should be made ahead of time to identify a museum that has items and works one can easily connect to our HUM 111 class and book. Since HUM 111 covers from ancient times to the 1500s AD, it makes more sense to focus on items from that time frame. In general, museums with artistic cultural artifacts and fine arts work better than history museums.
Any questions about whether a museum-visit activity fits the course and assignment well enough will be decided by the instructor when the student seeks approval for the activity. Any alternative activity outside the normal ones listed here, such as for those limited by disability or distance, will be determined by the instructor. Generally, we do not expect students to travel over an hour to get to an approved activity.
Take notes as you go through the museum and accept any handouts or pamphlets that the museum staff gives you. While you should not quote anything from the printed material when you do your report, the handouts may help to refresh your memory later.
The quality of your experience is not measured by the amount of time you spend in the galleries or the number of works of art that you actually see. The most rewarding experiences can come from finding two (2) or three (3) pieces of art or exhibits which intrigue you and then consi.
1
Islamic Art History
Guideline
The 4-part analysis method
The 4-part analysis method that art historians use:
• physical properties
• formal or visual structure (also known simply as form)
• subject matter and symbolism (also known as content or meaning)
• cultural context
•
1-The first part of the four-part analysis considers physical properties.
Questions:
Here are some questions we ask when we examine physical properties:
• What type of artwork is it: painting, sculpture, architecture, textile, woodwork?
• What is the work made of: stone, crushed minerals, inlaid lapis lazuli?
• How is that material visible? Is it smooth and hard or textured and rough?
• How has the material been handled? What technique was used to manipulate the
material?
• How big is the work? How does it compare to the size of a human body? Hint: The
textbook provides scale comparisons for all illustrations.
Evidence:
When we answer those questions, we provide evidence as it appears in the work of art.
2- Form
Form refers to the appearance of the work of art. We also call it the visual structure or style of
the work of art.
Form consists of how the artist uses the materials to create visual expression. This expression
comes through the building blocks of the work of art known as the visual elements (color, line,
light, texture, shape, space) and composition (organization of shapes, balance, and proportion).
The choice of how to handle these building blocks of the work of art--known as formal elements
and principles of design--is sometimes dictated by how all artists of a particular time and place
work. We call this a period or cultural style. In other cases, especially in the modern era, the
choice of formal characteristics is individual and the artist has a personal style.
2
What about form in architecture? This refers to the building blocks of floor plan, structural
elements like columns and domes, and the decorative elements that adorn the building.
Artists of a particular period and culture typically share similar forms or style. Knowing the
formal characteristics of this style an essential part of art history.
Questions:
When you analyze form or visual structure, here are some questions to ask.
• Is the work naturalistic? Does it look like things do in nature or does it depart from
visible forms? How?
• How is space presented? Does it create an illusion of three dimensions or is it flatter?
• How is color handled? Do the colors look like they do in nature? Do they repeat
throughout the image?
• How is line handled? Are things outlined? Are there real lines (like a road) or implied
lines (like a line of sight)?
• How are light and shadow handled? Is everything bathed in an even light or are there
dramatic highlights and deep shadows? Does shading help make things look three-
dimensional?
• How is the work organized? Is everything lined up in a row or are they grouped in a
pyramid ...
1. Visit the following Web sites and explore the collections of Anci.docxmansonagnus
1. Visit the following Web sites and explore the collections of Ancient Art there:
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Louvre Museum
The Smithsonian Institution Freer Gallery and Sackler Gallery
select two works of art from any ancient culture.
2. Using the terminology and concepts you are learning for evaluating art, compare and contrast the two works including materials used, style, meaning, symbolism, and any other aesthetic issues.
What is the FORM of the work?
Is it a two-dimensional or three-dimensional work of art?
What materials are used?
What techniques or processes are used to create the artwork?
What colors are used?
Describe the use of line, shape, texture, value, color, and balance.
Does the work of art have SUBJECT MATTER?
If so, what is literally depicted?
Is the work of art REPRESENTATIONAL, ABSTRACT, or NONOBJECTIVE?
What is the CONTENT?
What does it mean or represent?
What is the artist's message?
Is symbolism used? If so, what is the meaning?
What is the context of the artwork?
What is the function of the artwork?
What traditional role of the artist is exemplified?
3. Explain how the works of art fit into the context of the time period.
Keep in mind that only artworks that fit into the period of Ancient Art (created between 30,000 BCE- 500 CE) will be accepted
.
500 words not including references
No Plagerizm
.
As described in Lecture Note 1, geography is a part of everyday life.docxssusera34210
As described in Lecture Note 1, geography is a part of everyday life and the study of which ranges from how we design our cities to what lies on the ocean floor. One of the more important kinds of geography is political geography, which can involve everything from the creation of local zoning areas to borders between nations. In your opinion, which level of political geography is more important, that at the local level that impacts people’s everyday lives such as the ability to build an addition onto their house or a national one, which may involve disputed territory and result in armed conflict? Be sure to use examples to support your key points.
.
As an extra credit, Must discuss at least one (1) o.docxssusera34210
As an extra credit,
:
Must discuss at least one (1) other student's topic
Student discussion:
Since its emergence in the 1960's, plate tectonic theory has gained wide-spread acceptance as the model of how Earth's land masses shift over time. Plate tectonics developed historically in 1915 when Alfred Wegener proposed his theory of "continental drift." He stated that the continents plowed through crust of ocean basins, which would explain why the outlines of many coastlines, such as South America and Africa, appeared to fit like missing pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.
There are various types of plate boundaries such as: convergent plate boundaries, when two collide; divergent plate boundaries, when they spread apart; and transform boundaries, when they slide past each other.
http://scecinfo.usc.edu/education/k12/learn/plate2.htm
.
As an institution, Walden has long supported days of service and.docxssusera34210
As an institution, Walden has long supported days of service and encouraged students, faculty, and staff to give back to their communities. In the companion Assignment for this module, you are developing a plan for a proposed Global Day of Service project. For this Discussion, you will explain the Global Day of Service project you are proposing for your Assignment and offer feedback and support for your colleagues’ projects.
Important Note:
You will share your ideas regarding your Module 5 Assignment in this Discussion. Be sure to read through the instructions for this Discussion and the Module 5 Assignment prior to beginning work this week.
To prepare:
Review the instructions for the Module 5 Course Project assignment.
Review the Walden University sites regarding social change and Walden’s Global Days of Service. Consider the many meaningful opportunities found in early childhood programs, K–12 schools, and communities for enacting social change. How will the Walden Global Day of Service project you are proposing in this module’s Assignment support social change in your program and field?
Review the Callahan et al. (2012) paper in the Learning Resources. Which of the eight features of social change will be reflected the most in your Day of Service project?
An explanation of the following:
The Day of Service project you are proposing for this module’s Assignment
How your proposed project would support social change in your program and field
Which of the eight features of social change are integrated the most in your Day of Service project
For this Discussion, and all scholarly writing in this course and throughout your program, you will be required to use APA style and provide reference citations.
Learning Resources
Note:
To access this module’s required library resources, please click on the link to the Course Readings List, found in the
Course Materials
section of your Syllabus.
Required Readings
Fullan, M. (2016).
The new meaning of educational change
(5th ed.). New York, NY: Teachers College Press.
Chapter 13, “The Future of Educational Change” (pp. 258–265)
Callahan, D., Wilson, E., Birdsall, I., Estabrook-Fishinghawk, B., Carson, G., Ford, S., . . . Yob, I. (2012).
Expanding our understanding of social change: A report from the definition task force of the HLC Special Emphasis Project
[White paper]. Minneapolis, MN: Walden University.
Social Change Web Maps
[Diagrams]. Adapted from Expanding our understanding of social change, by Callahan, D., Wilson, E., Birdsall, I., Estabrook-Fishinghawk, B., Carson, G., Ford, S., Ouzts, K., & Yob, I., 2008. Baltimore, MD: Walden University. Adapted with permission of Walden University.
Cooper, K. S., Stanulis, R. N., Brondyk, S. K. Hamilton, E. R., Macaluso, M., & Meier, J. A. (2016). The teacher leadership process: Attempting change within embedded systems. Journal of Educational Change, 17(1), 85–113. .
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Final Project InformationSan Francisco Museum of Modern Art.docxlmelaine
Final Project Information
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Minnesota Art Project – SF Galleries
Final Project Review of the essay format and required content.
Include the following concepts in your paper:
FINAL PROJECT: Written Visual Analysis/ Role of the Artist
DUE: Reference the due date on Canvas- If you do not complete the final project essay you will not pass the class.
Be sure to let me know if you have any questions.
Select a twentieth {1900’s} or twenty-first-century {2000’s} and their work being exhibited at a local museum.
I recommend the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), or any other major museum or gallery that is available to you. If you plan to go to a different museum or gallery, it is required you check in with me to get approval to go to a different museum.
Once you pick the artist, include and reference the four types of investigation Process of Visual Analyze, and explain what Role (out of the four roles) your artist identifies with during their creative process and concepts presented in their exhibition. Also include a biography on the artist in the introduction of your essay. Be sure to be thoughtful with your essays conclusion, {closing paragraph}, it is best to summarize the main points, considerations and concepts covered in your essay.
If you have an Oakland library card, or sign up for one you can get 2 free tickets to SFMOMA.
Here is the information:
You can use this website- https://oaklandlibrary.discoverandgo.net/ and get 2 free adult tickets for SFMOMA.
1) Artist name - Dianne Jones
2) The name of the work – Mission Bay Facing Northeast
3) The date the work was made – June 2008
4) Size of the artwork – 96 in x 120 in
5) Materials / medium - Chromogenic Color Print
6) Technique – created with a 4x5 large format camera, long exposure
7) Does it have any apparent function – Fine Art Photography Genre
Format the images with the assessment of physical properties, review the sample included in the PowerPoint that discusses the final project requirements.
One image/artwork page per, and the other pages would be your written text.
Artist name - Dianne Jones
The name of the work – Avenal Prison
The date the work was made – May 2012
Size of the artwork – 60 in x 60 in
Materials / medium - Chromogenic Color Print
Technique – created with a 4x5 large format camera, long exposure
Does it have any apparent function - Fine Art Photography Genre
Artist name - Dianne Jones
The name of the work – Mission Bay Facing South
The date the work was made – May 2002
Size of the artwork – 50 in x 60 in
Materials / medium - Chromogenic Color Print
Technique – created with a 4x5 large format camera, long exposure
Does it have any apparent function – Fine Art Photography Genre
Essay requirements:
Double-spaced 6 to 7 pages, which includes the images and the assessment of physical properties.
One image/artwork page per, and the other pages would be your written text.
Include a biogr ...
1 ART 101 FORM AND IDEA MUSEUM ES.docxmayank272369
1
ART 101:
FORM AND IDEA
MUSEUM ESSAY
All students will be required to visit the Tampa Museum of Art, the St. Petersburg Museum of Fine Arts, the
Dali Museum in St. Petersburg, or the Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota. Students will write a minimum
1500 word research paper (approx. 5 pages in length) based on one artwork of their choosing from the
museum to investigate in further detail. The completed paper is due at the beginning of class on the assigned
due date (see course syllabus for deadlines).
This assignment will require students to a thoughtful analysis based on accepted research as well as your own
developed point of view. Completed essays will be sustained thesis-driven interpretations of a single artwork
based on scholarly research (three sources minimum are required).
When selecting your artwork, pick the one that appeals to you and that you want to further examine. (Keep in
mind that you may want to select an object that has already had significant scholarly research within art
history.) A brief visual analysis of the selected artwork will ultimately support your thesis and lend credence to
your research. Meaning, your discussion of the artist’s selection and use of the visual elements and principles
of design should connect to your broader knowledge of style and pictorial culture, as we have discussed them
in class lecture. Your analysis should also move from description to interpretation as it relates to your central
argument – i.e., the particular qualities of the medium (ceramic, sculpture, painting, etc.) and how this relates
to the artist’s content or culture; how the visual elements found in the artwork reflect (or were affected by)
important cultural values found in the society in which it was made; how the work confronts the human
condition or experience of its culture; the expressive significance of formal elements, spatial design, or motifs
and their interaction; or how the artist has used visual elements to communicate a particular
message/experience to his/her viewers.
MUSEUM INFORMATION
For more information on the Tampa Museum of Art, its location, hours of operation and collections, please see
its website: http://tampamuseum.org. College student admission (with ID) is FREE, or Pay-as-you-will
admission on Fridays between 4–8 PM.
For more information on the St. Petersburg Museum of Fine Arts, its location, hours of operation and
collections, please see its website: http://www.fine-arts.org. Regular student admission (with ID) is $10, and
$5 after 5:00 PM on Thursdays.
For more information on the Salvador Dali Museum, its location, hours of operation and collections, please
see its website: http://thedali.org. Regular student admission (with ID) is $15 and is $10 after 5:00 PM on
Thursdays. Note: on-site parking at the Dali costs $10, but is within walk-able distance of downtown parking.
For more information on the Ringling Museum of Arts, its l ...
AssignmentAnalytical paperAcademic essay – academic tone of l.docxssuser562afc1
Assignment:
Analytical paper
Academic essay – academic tone of language, structure (argumentation for a point to present evidence and the research, argue through and supporting the ideas with the topic that I have chosen which will be in the conclusion, introduction what I want to achieve) the structure depends on the analysis of the subject.
1 theme and explore it and focus on 3 pieces of art from different genres (one sculpture, one film one piece of music e.g.)
In conclusion, state my findings.
Introduction: state what I want to prove or analyze. Introduce the theme that ive chosen.
3 different genres to support my argument.
What does it say about the time it was produced, theme, how our society is today? Identify this in the work.
Reference painting, film etc
Referencing is very important. APA.
Put the pieces of art in the essay (in order so the reader can see the e.g. painting, sculpture, poem)
Assignment:
Analytical paper
Academic essay
–
academic tone of language, structure (argumentation for a
point to present evidence and the research, argue through and supporting the
ideas with the topic that
I ha
ve chosen which will be in the conclusion,
introduction what I want to achieve) the structure depends on the analysis of the
subject.
1
theme
a
n
d
explore it and focus on
3 pieces of art from different genres
(one
sculpture, one film one piece of music e.g
.)
In conclusion, state my findings.
Introduction: state what I want to prove or analyze. Introduce the theme that
ive chosen.
3 different
genres
to support my argument.
What does it say about the time it was produced, theme, how our society is
today? Id
entify this in the work.
Reference
painting, film
etc
Referencing is very important. APA.
Put the pieces of art in the essay (in order so the reader can see the e.g. painting,
sculpture, poem)
Assignment:
Analytical paper
Academic essay – academic tone of language, structure (argumentation for a
point to present evidence and the research, argue through and supporting the
ideas with the topic that I have chosen which will be in the conclusion,
introduction what I want to achieve) the structure depends on the analysis of the
subject.
1 theme and explore it and focus on 3 pieces of art from different genres (one
sculpture, one film one piece of music e.g.)
In conclusion, state my findings.
Introduction: state what I want to prove or analyze. Introduce the theme that
ive chosen.
3 different genres to support my argument.
What does it say about the time it was produced, theme, how our society is
today? Identify this in the work.
Reference painting, film etc
Referencing is very important. APA.
Put the pieces of art in the essay (in order so the reader can see the e.g. painting,
sculpture, poem)
for these questions please be sure to use a standard essay format; introduction, body and conclusion.
Essay
Please complete the following four essay questions. In your answer ...
3-4 pages not including referencesDetailsFor your Individual P.docxssuser47f0be
3-4 pages not including references
Details:
For your Individual Project assignment, you will compare and contrast a work of art in a specific classification (Renaissance or Gothic) appearing on a WEBSITE with a work of art in your TEXTBOOK of the same classification. You can choose either two Renaissance paintings, two Renaissance sculptures, or two Gothic Cathedrals to discuss (two works in total). You may not discuss works that you have already discussed in another assignment.
1. To begin your project, explore the following websites classifications for your individual essay.
A. Visit the following Web sites to review Renaissance art. Links to these Web sites are available through the unit Resources List, in Course Materials.
The Vatican Museums
ArtLex – Earlier Renaissance Art
ArtLex – Later Renaissance Art
OR
B. Visit these Web sites for Gothic Cathedrals. Links to these Web sites are available through the unit Resources List, in Course Materials.
Chartres Cathedral
A Digital Archive of Architecture – High Gothic
Earthlore Gothic Dreams – Cathedral Architecture
2. Write the Individual Project (3–4 pages not including references):
Using the terminology and concepts you are learning for evaluating art, including materials used, style, meaning, and symbolism, and any other aesthetic issues, compare and contrast ONE of the selected works from the selected websites classification with a DIFFERENT work of art of the same classification from your TEXTBOOK . For example, compare two paintings from the Renaissance period or two gothic cathedrals. Use the following instructions to construct your paper:
For each of the works of art, describe and compare attributes of the works by following the guidelines below to structure your essay.
1. What is the FORM of the work?
Is it a two-dimensional or three-dimensional work of art?
What materials are used?
What techniques or processes are used to create the artwork?
What colors are used?
Describe the use of line, shape, texture, value, color, and balance.
2. Does the work of art have SUBJECT MATTER?
If so, what is literally depicted?
Is the work of art REPRESENTATIONAL, ABSTRACT, or NONOBJECTIVE?
3. What is the CONTENT?
What does it mean or represent?
What is the artist's message?
Is symbolism used? If so, what is the meaning?
What is the context of the artwork?
What is the function of the artwork?
What traditional role of the artist is exemplified?
4. Explain how the works of art fit into the context of the time period.
Keep in mind that only art works that fit into the period of Middle Ages - Renaissance (created between 1350–1520
CE) will be accepted
.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
B. Required Discussion Board assignment.
Two criteria used to judge the quality of a work are craft (how well an artwork was made) and communication (the uniqueness of the artist's vision and its message or meaning). Michelangelo Buonarroti and Leonar.
Visit a museum or gallery exhibition or attend a theater or musi.docxdavieec5f
Visit a museum or gallery exhibition or attend a theater or musical performance before the end of Week 10. The activity (museum or performance) should have content that fits our course well. Have fun doing this.
Write a two to three (2-3) page report (500-750 words) that describes your experience.
Clearly identify the event location, date attended, the attendees, and your initial reaction upon arriving at the event.
Provide specific information and a description of at least two (2)
pieces
(e.g., art, exhibits, music, etc.).
Provide a summary of the event and describe your overall reaction after attending the event.
Use at least the class text as a reference (additional sources are fine, not necessary unless required by your content). Your report should include connections you make between things observed in your activity and things learned in the course and text.
Note:
Submit your cultural activity choice to the instructor for approval before the end of Week 5 (earlier is even better). Look for guidance from the instructor for how or where to make your proposal. You may also seek advice from your instructor (provide your town/state or zip code) for a good activity in your general area.
Visiting a Museum
It makes sense to approach a museum the way a seasoned traveler approaches visiting a city for the first time. Find out what there is available to see. In the museum, find out what sort of exhibitions are currently housed in the museum and start with the exhibits that interest you.
If there is a travelling exhibition, it’s always a good idea to see it while you have the chance. Then, if you have time, you can look at other things in the museum.
Every effort should be made ahead of time to identify a museum that has items and works one can easily connect to our HUM 111 class and book. Since HUM 111 covers from ancient times to the 1500s AD, it makes more sense to focus on items from that time frame. In general, museums with artistic cultural artifacts and fine arts work better than history museums.
Any questions about whether a museum-visit activity fits the course and assignment well enough will be decided by the instructor when the student seeks approval for the activity. Any alternative activity outside the normal ones listed here, such as for those limited by disability or distance, will be determined by the instructor. Generally, we do not expect students to travel over an hour to get to an approved activity.
Take notes as you go through the museum and accept any handouts or pamphlets that the museum staff gives you. While you should not quote anything from the printed material when you do your report, the handouts may help to refresh your memory later.
The quality of your experience is not measured by the amount of time you spend in the galleries or the number of works of art that you actually see. The most rewarding experiences can come from finding two (2) or three (3) pieces of art or exhibits which intrigue you and then consi.
1
Islamic Art History
Guideline
The 4-part analysis method
The 4-part analysis method that art historians use:
• physical properties
• formal or visual structure (also known simply as form)
• subject matter and symbolism (also known as content or meaning)
• cultural context
•
1-The first part of the four-part analysis considers physical properties.
Questions:
Here are some questions we ask when we examine physical properties:
• What type of artwork is it: painting, sculpture, architecture, textile, woodwork?
• What is the work made of: stone, crushed minerals, inlaid lapis lazuli?
• How is that material visible? Is it smooth and hard or textured and rough?
• How has the material been handled? What technique was used to manipulate the
material?
• How big is the work? How does it compare to the size of a human body? Hint: The
textbook provides scale comparisons for all illustrations.
Evidence:
When we answer those questions, we provide evidence as it appears in the work of art.
2- Form
Form refers to the appearance of the work of art. We also call it the visual structure or style of
the work of art.
Form consists of how the artist uses the materials to create visual expression. This expression
comes through the building blocks of the work of art known as the visual elements (color, line,
light, texture, shape, space) and composition (organization of shapes, balance, and proportion).
The choice of how to handle these building blocks of the work of art--known as formal elements
and principles of design--is sometimes dictated by how all artists of a particular time and place
work. We call this a period or cultural style. In other cases, especially in the modern era, the
choice of formal characteristics is individual and the artist has a personal style.
2
What about form in architecture? This refers to the building blocks of floor plan, structural
elements like columns and domes, and the decorative elements that adorn the building.
Artists of a particular period and culture typically share similar forms or style. Knowing the
formal characteristics of this style an essential part of art history.
Questions:
When you analyze form or visual structure, here are some questions to ask.
• Is the work naturalistic? Does it look like things do in nature or does it depart from
visible forms? How?
• How is space presented? Does it create an illusion of three dimensions or is it flatter?
• How is color handled? Do the colors look like they do in nature? Do they repeat
throughout the image?
• How is line handled? Are things outlined? Are there real lines (like a road) or implied
lines (like a line of sight)?
• How are light and shadow handled? Is everything bathed in an even light or are there
dramatic highlights and deep shadows? Does shading help make things look three-
dimensional?
• How is the work organized? Is everything lined up in a row or are they grouped in a
pyramid ...
1. Visit the following Web sites and explore the collections of Anci.docxmansonagnus
1. Visit the following Web sites and explore the collections of Ancient Art there:
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Louvre Museum
The Smithsonian Institution Freer Gallery and Sackler Gallery
select two works of art from any ancient culture.
2. Using the terminology and concepts you are learning for evaluating art, compare and contrast the two works including materials used, style, meaning, symbolism, and any other aesthetic issues.
What is the FORM of the work?
Is it a two-dimensional or three-dimensional work of art?
What materials are used?
What techniques or processes are used to create the artwork?
What colors are used?
Describe the use of line, shape, texture, value, color, and balance.
Does the work of art have SUBJECT MATTER?
If so, what is literally depicted?
Is the work of art REPRESENTATIONAL, ABSTRACT, or NONOBJECTIVE?
What is the CONTENT?
What does it mean or represent?
What is the artist's message?
Is symbolism used? If so, what is the meaning?
What is the context of the artwork?
What is the function of the artwork?
What traditional role of the artist is exemplified?
3. Explain how the works of art fit into the context of the time period.
Keep in mind that only artworks that fit into the period of Ancient Art (created between 30,000 BCE- 500 CE) will be accepted
.
500 words not including references
No Plagerizm
.
As described in Lecture Note 1, geography is a part of everyday life.docxssusera34210
As described in Lecture Note 1, geography is a part of everyday life and the study of which ranges from how we design our cities to what lies on the ocean floor. One of the more important kinds of geography is political geography, which can involve everything from the creation of local zoning areas to borders between nations. In your opinion, which level of political geography is more important, that at the local level that impacts people’s everyday lives such as the ability to build an addition onto their house or a national one, which may involve disputed territory and result in armed conflict? Be sure to use examples to support your key points.
.
As an extra credit, Must discuss at least one (1) o.docxssusera34210
As an extra credit,
:
Must discuss at least one (1) other student's topic
Student discussion:
Since its emergence in the 1960's, plate tectonic theory has gained wide-spread acceptance as the model of how Earth's land masses shift over time. Plate tectonics developed historically in 1915 when Alfred Wegener proposed his theory of "continental drift." He stated that the continents plowed through crust of ocean basins, which would explain why the outlines of many coastlines, such as South America and Africa, appeared to fit like missing pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.
There are various types of plate boundaries such as: convergent plate boundaries, when two collide; divergent plate boundaries, when they spread apart; and transform boundaries, when they slide past each other.
http://scecinfo.usc.edu/education/k12/learn/plate2.htm
.
As an institution, Walden has long supported days of service and.docxssusera34210
As an institution, Walden has long supported days of service and encouraged students, faculty, and staff to give back to their communities. In the companion Assignment for this module, you are developing a plan for a proposed Global Day of Service project. For this Discussion, you will explain the Global Day of Service project you are proposing for your Assignment and offer feedback and support for your colleagues’ projects.
Important Note:
You will share your ideas regarding your Module 5 Assignment in this Discussion. Be sure to read through the instructions for this Discussion and the Module 5 Assignment prior to beginning work this week.
To prepare:
Review the instructions for the Module 5 Course Project assignment.
Review the Walden University sites regarding social change and Walden’s Global Days of Service. Consider the many meaningful opportunities found in early childhood programs, K–12 schools, and communities for enacting social change. How will the Walden Global Day of Service project you are proposing in this module’s Assignment support social change in your program and field?
Review the Callahan et al. (2012) paper in the Learning Resources. Which of the eight features of social change will be reflected the most in your Day of Service project?
An explanation of the following:
The Day of Service project you are proposing for this module’s Assignment
How your proposed project would support social change in your program and field
Which of the eight features of social change are integrated the most in your Day of Service project
For this Discussion, and all scholarly writing in this course and throughout your program, you will be required to use APA style and provide reference citations.
Learning Resources
Note:
To access this module’s required library resources, please click on the link to the Course Readings List, found in the
Course Materials
section of your Syllabus.
Required Readings
Fullan, M. (2016).
The new meaning of educational change
(5th ed.). New York, NY: Teachers College Press.
Chapter 13, “The Future of Educational Change” (pp. 258–265)
Callahan, D., Wilson, E., Birdsall, I., Estabrook-Fishinghawk, B., Carson, G., Ford, S., . . . Yob, I. (2012).
Expanding our understanding of social change: A report from the definition task force of the HLC Special Emphasis Project
[White paper]. Minneapolis, MN: Walden University.
Social Change Web Maps
[Diagrams]. Adapted from Expanding our understanding of social change, by Callahan, D., Wilson, E., Birdsall, I., Estabrook-Fishinghawk, B., Carson, G., Ford, S., Ouzts, K., & Yob, I., 2008. Baltimore, MD: Walden University. Adapted with permission of Walden University.
Cooper, K. S., Stanulis, R. N., Brondyk, S. K. Hamilton, E. R., Macaluso, M., & Meier, J. A. (2016). The teacher leadership process: Attempting change within embedded systems. Journal of Educational Change, 17(1), 85–113. .
As computer and internet technologies have advanced and become m.docxssusera34210
As computer and internet technologies have advanced and become more easily accessible across the world, we are seeing an explosion of social activists, government agencies and terrorists using these technologies to further their efforts. Government and non-government entities use the internet to spread propaganda and information, recruit support and demonize opponents. The efforts of some radical groups, like ISIS, to shut down US infrastructure and thwart military activity can clearly be labeled as cyberterrorism. However, some groups, such as the loosely associated international network of self-proclaimed “hacktivists” identified as Anonymous, are blurring the lines between what constitutes terrorism and what is simply social activism. As technology continues to advance and further our capabilities, we are continuously presented with new and intriguing moral questions.
After reading the module notes and all of the supplemental materials, respond to the following:
Briefly define cyberterrorism. Define hacktivism. Illustrate examples of each in current events within the last decade.
What is the fundamental difference between these two?
How has technology helped to advance these groups?
How do you think our government’s response to such groups has changed our attitudes towards our own freedoms?
In your opinion, do you think Hacktivism is justified or is it just a subset of cyberterrorism? Give some examples to support your stance.
Support your position using appropriate sources that are properly cited.
.
As cultural and literary scholar Louis Henry Gates claims, Repetit.docxssusera34210
As cultural and literary scholar Louis Henry Gates claims, "Repetition and revision are fundamental to black artistic forms, from painting and sculpture to music and language use." This "Signifyin(g)" is a dynamic noted throughout hip-hop music because its foundation is rooted in "sampling" music that came before. But the content of rap also expresses a Black experience. Therefore, in your final response this week, discuss three significant subjects or themes that hip-hop artists Signify on in the African American literary tradition as they express their own notions of Blackness in lyrical rap music.
.
As an African American male, social issues are some that seem to.docxssusera34210
As an African American male, social issues are some that seem to be a part of our everyday life at the time of birth. Whether it’s our skin being threatening towards other groups of society, police brutality, not receiving the same education, jobs, or housing as those of other cultures; it’s something that burned into our part of growing up and learning how to maneuver the world around us. Being that this is something that is thrown in our face time and time again, I would like to talk about the trust or lack thereof, between “professional helpers” and African American males. You must first stop and take a look at the deep roots of past and current events that lead to African Americans not trusting the help that’s provided by doctors, lawyers, therapists, etc. For example, historical adversity, which includes slavery, sharecropping, and race-based exclusion from health, educational, social, and economic resources, translates into socioeconomic disparities experienced by Black and African American people today. Socioeconomic status, in turn, is linked to mental health: People who are impoverished, homeless, incarcerated, or have substance use problems are at higher risk for poor mental health.
Despite progress made over the years, racism continues to have an impact on the mental health of Black and African American people. Negative stereotypes and attitudes of rejection have decreased, but continue to occur with measurable, adverse consequences. Historical and contemporary instances of negative treatment have led to a mistrust of authorities, many of whom are not seen as having the best interests of Black and African Americans in mind. The culture from which many African Americans are raised, has a greater distrust of the medical helpers and medical offices alike, from the belief of racial bias. A great example is that of the Tuskegee experiment, where the abuses of slaves by white doctors, simply for the use of medical experimentation. There was no sense of consent or refusal from the African American participants to participate, just because of their lower level in society and the mass discrimination during that time. It’s those issues of the past, that resist black males from seeking the help they truly need, in order to bring them back to the feeling of self and self-worth; and to add a more recent impact, just look at the COVID vaccine, many are skeptical of receiving it, just because of what happens at Tuskegee. Despite progress made over the years, racism continues to have an impact on the mental health of Black and African American people. Negative stereotypes and attitudes of rejection have decreased, but continue to occur with measurable, adverse consequences. Historical and contemporary instances of negative treatment have led to a mistrust of authorities, many of whom are not seen as having the best interests of Black and African Americans in mind.
Most importantly, one must be willing to understand how having a multicultu.
As a work teamDecide on the proto personas each team member .docxssusera34210
As a work team
Decide on the proto personas each team member will create.
● Begin with your user assumptions worksheet
● Individually, create a list of audience attributes/characteristics (your own views on the user) on sticky notes
● cluster these into 3 - 8 profiles (Take a photo)
● discuss your clusters and move around notes as needed.
● decide as a team, which clusters will be turned into your proto personas.
Each team of three should have at least 3 different user types that you think will use your site. (4 if you are in a team of 4).
Individually
● Create two personas
o PROTO-PERSONA
The first should be one of the proto-personas agreed by your team members in the process above
▪ Use the information from the Lean UX reading and learning materials to help you create your persona
▪ This can be hand drawn and included in your final document as a photograph.
o TRADITIONAL PERSONA
The second is a traditional persona (NOT related to your project website). Use the student data & template provided:
▪ The persona needs to represent the statistical data provided
▪ Use the given ppt template to create the traditional persona or find your own and use that.
.
As an astute social worker and professional policy advocate, on.docxssusera34210
As an astute social worker and professional policy advocate, once you have selected a social problem, you begin the process of creating and implementing a policy that addresses that social problem.
Address the following items within your group's Wiki page for Part 2:
Topic is Immigration
Is the policy identified by your group dictated by local, state, or federal statute—or a combination thereof?
APA FORMAT
2 REFERENCES
.
As a special education professional, it is important to be aware of .docxssusera34210
As a special education professional, it is important to be aware of how social and cultural influences can impact the assessment process. Lack of awareness can lead to charges of discrimination and possible litigation.
Using support from the required readings, the Instructor Guidance, supplemental information derived from outside sources and your discussion, and information from the scenario below, you will (a) use information you have learned about Manuel to complete the
Child Study Team Referral Form
found in the
Week Three Instructor Guidance
, and (b) write a 3 page report with your recommendations for Tier Two RTI interventions that take Manuel's social and cultural background into account.
Scenario:
Manuel is becoming more and more listless in class and is still not doing well with his assignments. You have noticed though, that he seems to be making friends, as outside of class each morning you notice him joking and talking with a group of boys. They talk about BMX bikes and an online computer game that they all play. You are aware that some of the boys in that group are involved in the school robotics team and you begin to wonder how you could use his newly formed friendships and your insights into his interests to support his language arts skills.
You and Mr. Franklin are also excited about a workshop you just attended with Dr. Janette Klingner who talked about
how to realize the potential of RTI (Links to an external site.)
(Klingner, J, 2011) with culturally and linguistically diverse learners. The Child Study Team has been doing diagnostic work to see if there are other variables within the classroom and/or school environment that may be affecting Manuel's performance. What the Child Study Team discovers is that Manuel feels embarrassed by his slow reading compared to his classmates and does not see the relevance of classes that are not related to his intended career goal, engineering. The team also notes that Manuel is able to write well, but he often does not finish in-class assignments and tests, and his homework written assignments are very short. The lack of length in his assignments consistently costs him points.
When you talk to Manuel he shows pride when you compliment him on his bilingual ability and ask for his help in translating for a new student from Guatemala. Finally, the team becomes aware that Manuel does not want to be labeled "dumb" and is worried that he will be made fun of if he is pulled out of his regular classes for more intensive support. Manuel’s vision and hearing test were both are normal and his medical exam does not reveal any medical issues.
As a member of the Child Study Team (CST) and taking into account Manuel's interests and the social and cultural influences that may be affecting Manuel's school performance, you and the CST are planning your next steps. You and Mr. Franklin discuss what interventions would take into account Manuel’s cultural and linguistic background. .
As an incoming CEO, how would you have approached the senior leaders.docxssusera34210
As an incoming CEO, how would you have approached the senior leadership team that neglected to stop the bleeding and encouraged the toxicity? Where would you say your organization lands on Deloitte's Six Personas of Change? Which of the six signature traits are you most comfortable with? And which requires more of a stretch for you?
.
As a prison administrator (wardensuperintendent), what would your r.docxssusera34210
As a prison administrator (warden/superintendent), what would your recommendation be for HIV testing within the prison system? Why or why not? If so, when should it take place (e.g. during admission, anytime during incarceration, just prior to release)? Should the offenders who are HIV/AIDS positive be segregated? Would it be a violation of the offender’s rights to be segregated from the general population? reaponse must be 400- 500 words
.
As a helpful tool for schools, organizations, and agencies working w.docxssusera34210
As a helpful tool for schools, organizations, and agencies working with families to have on hand to refer families to services that might be needed to assist the child and/or family.
Create a resource guide for your community (Mississippi) on services available that might help children and or families. This does not have to be an extensive list, but a representation of what should be included in an in-depth guide.
.
Article
Interspecies ChimerismwithMammalian Pluripotent
Stem Cells
Graphical Abstract
Highlights
d Naive rat PSCs robustly contribute to live rat-mouse
chimeras
d A versatile CRISPR-Cas9 mediated interspecies blastocyst
complementation system
d Naive rodent PSCs show no chimeric contribution to post-
implantation pig embryos
d Chimerism is observed with some human iPSCs in post-
implantation pig embryos
Wu et al., 2017, Cell 168, 473–486
January 26, 2017 ª 2017 Elsevier Inc.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2016.12.036
Authors
Jun Wu, Aida Platero-Luengo,
Masahiro Sakurai, ..., Emilio A. Martinez,
Pablo Juan Ross,
Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte
Correspondence
[email protected]
In Brief
Human pluripotent stem cells robustly
engraft into both cattle and pig pre-
implantation blastocysts, but show
limited chimeric contribution to post-
implantation pig embryos.
mailto:[email protected]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2016.12.036
http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1016/j.cell.2016.12.036&domain=pdf
Article
Interspecies Chimerism
with Mammalian Pluripotent Stem Cells
Jun Wu,1 Aida Platero-Luengo,1 Masahiro Sakurai,1 Atsushi Sugawara,1 Maria Antonia Gil,2 Takayoshi Yamauchi,1
Keiichiro Suzuki,1 Yanina Soledad Bogliotti,3 Cristina Cuello,2 Mariana Morales Valencia,1 Daiji Okumura,1,7
Jingping Luo,1 Marcela Vilariño,3 Inmaculada Parrilla,2 Delia Alba Soto,3 Cristina A. Martinez,2 Tomoaki Hishida,1
Sonia Sánchez-Bautista,4 M. Llanos Martinez-Martinez,4 Huili Wang,3 Alicia Nohalez,2 Emi Aizawa,1
Paloma Martinez-Redondo,1 Alejandro Ocampo,1 Pradeep Reddy,1 Jordi Roca,2 Elizabeth A. Maga,3
Concepcion Rodriguez Esteban,1 W. Travis Berggren,1 Estrella Nuñez Delicado,4 Jeronimo Lajara,4 Isabel Guillen,5
Pedro Guillen,4,5 Josep M. Campistol,6 Emilio A. Martinez,2 Pablo Juan Ross,3 and Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte1,8,*
1Salk Institute for Biological Studies, 10010 N. Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA
2Department of Animal Medicine and Surgery, University of Murcia Campus de Espinardo, 30100 Murcia, Spain
3Department of Animal Science, University of California Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA
4Universidad Católica San Antonio de Murcia (UCAM) Campus de los Jerónimos, N� 135 Guadalupe 30107 Murcia, Spain
5Clinica Centro Fundación Pedro Guillén, Clı́nica CEMTRO, Avenida Ventisquero de la Condesa 42, 28035 Madrid, Spain
6Hospital Clı́nico de Barcelona-IDIBAPS, Universitat de Barcelona, 08007 Barcelona, Spain
7Present address: Graduate School of Agriculture, Department of Advanced Bioscience, Kinki University, 3327-204 Nakamachi,
Nara 631-8505, Japan
8Lead Contact
*Correspondence: [email protected]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2016.12.036
SUMMARY
Interspecies blastocyst complementation enables
organ-specific enrichment of xenogenic pluripotent
stem cell (PSC) derivatives. Here, we establish a ver-
satile blastocyst complementation platform based
on CRISPR-Cas9-mediated zygote genome editin.
As a future leader in the field of health care administration, you m.docxssusera34210
As a future leader in the field of health care administration, you may face many chronic health threats to various systems. As you work to combat these threats and ensure community wellness, you are likely to become an agent of social change. This objective may be more challenging and critical to achieve in matters such as health emergencies and outbreaks. For leaders, outbreaks, epidemics, and pandemics elicit critical and timely attention to situations in health care administration.
In this week’s article by Gostin, Lucey, & Phelan (2014), the authors highlight the challenges present with an Ebola epidemic on a global scale. Using this Learning Resource from this week as well as 2–4 additional resources you may find from the Walden Library, current events, etc., consider your leadership perspective during an outbreak, epidemic, or pandemic.
As you collaborate with your group, individually select one of the following leadership roles that would respond during this outbreak:
Director, FEMA
Director, CDC
Governor of an afflicted state
Incident Response Commander
Response Leader, American Red Cross (or other nongovernmental organization)
***Health Care Administrator for a large medical center (
I HAVE SELECTED THIS ROLE
)****
After selecting your leadership role, use a systems approach to work with your group to establish an immediate response in preventing another pandemic.
The Assignment—Part 1:Individual Case Analysis (1–2 pages):
Based on the leadership role you selected for the Assignment, include the following:
A summary of the leadership challenges this leader would face in assuring the system changes necessary to be prepared for the next outbreak, epidemic, or pandemic
An explanation of how your leadership challenges as this leader relate to challenges of the other leaders listed above
Note:
The leadership challenges that you describe should be those you would face as an individual in the role of your selected leader, rather than the functional challenges of the agency this individual leads.
The Assignment—Part 2:Group Case Study Analysis (2–3 pages):
Then, using your leadership Assignment for the Case Study, collaborate with your colleagues to create a Group Case Study Analysis that includes:
An explanation of how the challenges identified in the individual case analyses collectively affect crisis response by the system and the individuals within it
An explanation of how transformational and transactional leaders might influence outcomes within this case
A summary of how poor leadership might affect the outcome of the case
.
Article Title and Date of the Article .docxssusera34210
Article
Title
and
Date
of
the
Article
The
Economist
“Insider
dealing:
euro
outs
fear
that
euro
ins
might
do
them
down”
October
17,
2015
Summary
This
article
posted
as
a
special
news
report
by
The
Economist,
is
focused
on
the
Eurozone
and
European
Union,
and
how
they
are
experiencing
some
problems
that
might
hurt
both
the
euro
currency
and
relations
with
non-‐-‐-‐euro
zone
countries.
At
the
moment,
in
Europe
there
are
two
types
of
observers:
the
Europhiles
and
Euroskeptics.
The
Europhiles
are
those
who
admire
Europe
and
favor
the
participation
of
the
European
Union,
while
on
the
other
side
of
the
spectrum
are
the
Euroskeptics,
who
are
those
who
are
opposed
to
increasing
the
powers
of
the
European
Union.
Currently,
the
alarming
political
issue
that
has
been
growing
in
Europe
is
the
negative
relationship
between
those
countries
that
belong
to
the
European
Union
and
Eurozone,
against
those
who
are
members
of
the
European
Union
but
not
the
Eurozone.
The
argument
here
is
that
those
members
belonging
to
the
Eurozone
have
been
meeting
together,
while
excluding
non-‐-‐-‐Eurozone
members
and
making
decisions
such
as
bails,
which
affect
all
countries
within
the
European
Union.
The
Eurozone
countries
believe
that
that
only
those
countries
that
are
members
of
the
Eurozone
should
be
allowed
to
voice
their
opinions
and
make
decisions
on
everything
regarding
the
euro,
since
they
are
the
ones
directly
affected
by
it.
On
the
other
hand,
the
non-‐-‐-‐Eurozone
countries
feel
like
the
euro
members
are
“ganging
up”
on
them,
meaning
that
they
feel
like
those
countries
in
the
Eurozone
are
making
decisions
regarding
their
own
interests,
and
not
the
collective
interests
of
all
members
of
the
European
Union.
Association
to
specific
chapter
material
and
concepts
2.4
A
Single
Currency
for
Europe:
The
Euro
(40)
Chapter
2
discusses
the
global
financial
environment
including
the
European
Union,
the
Euro.
Article The Effects of Color on the Moods of College .docxssusera34210
Article
The Effects of Color on the Moods
of College Students
Sevinc Kurt1 and Kelechi Kingsley Osueke2
Abstract
This research aims to discover the psychological effects of colors on individuals, using the students’ union complex in a
university campus. This building was chosen due to its richness in color variances. The research method is survey, and
questionnaires were drawn up and distributed to an even range of students, comprising both international and local
students; undergraduate and graduate. Questionnaires have been collected and analyzed to find out the effects different
colors had on students’ moods in different spaces of the students’ union complex. This research would contribute to
understand more about colors and how they affect our feelings and therefore to make better decisions and increase the
use of spaces when choosing colors for different spaces to suit the purpose for which they are designed.
Keywords
color, mood, architectural space
Introduction
We live in a world of color (Huchendorf, 2007, p. 1).
According to the various researches, the color that
surrounds us in our daily lives has a profound effect on our
mood and on our behavior (e.g., Babin, Hardesty, & Suter,
2003; Kwallek, Lewis, & Robbins, 1988; Kwallek,
Woodson, Lewis, & Sales, 1997; Rosenstein, 1985). In
clothing, interiors, landscape, and even natural light, a color
can change our mood from sad to happy, from confusion to
intelligence, from fear to confidence. It can actually be used
to “level out” emotions or to create different moods (Aves
& Aves, 1994, p. 120). The design of an environment
through a variety of means such as temperature, sounds,
layout, lighting, and colors can stimulate perceptual and
emotional responses in consumers and affect their behavior
(Kotler, 1973 in Yildirim, Akalinbaskaya, & Hidayetoglu,
2007, p. 3233). Therefore, it may follow that if we could
measure it, we may get a clue as to how our mood varies
when in any enclosed space. The ambiance of the interior
space affects the users’ behaviors and perception of that
place by influencing their emotional situation. In this
context, it is believed that the various physical components
including light and color have a great importance on the
environmental characteristics of space, especially in public
use like students’ union centers.
Hence, using the appropriate color in design is important
in such buildings. It is also significant to draw cognitive
map and way finding in interiors. Environmental
interventions that promote way finding can be implemented
on two levels: the design of the floor plan typology and
environmental cues, which comprise signage, furnishings,
lighting, colors, and so on. Vivid color coding may enhance
short-term memory and improve functional ability (Cernin,
Keller, & Stoner, 2003). So the use of color is one of the
crucial elements in designing the appropriate circulation of
public interiors. Furtherm.
As a clinical social worker it is important to understand group .docxssusera34210
As a clinical social worker it is important to understand group typology in order to choose the appropriate group method for a specific population or problem. Each type of group has its own approach and purpose. Two of the more frequently used types of groups are task groups and intervention groups.
For this Assignment, review the “Cortez Multimedia” case study, and identify a target behavior or issue that needs to be ameliorated, decreased, or increased. In a 2- to 4-page report, complete the following:
Choose either a treatment group or task group as your intervention for Paula Cortez.
Identify the model of treatment group (i.e., support, education, teams, or treatment conferences).
Using the typologies described in the Toseland & Rivas (2017) piece, describe the characteristics of your group. For instance, if you choose a treatment group that is a support group, what would be the purpose, leadership, focus, bond, composition, and communication?
Include the advantages and disadvantages of using this type of group as an intervention.
REQUIRED resource for assignment
A Meeting of an Interdisciplinary Team
Paula has just been involuntarily hospitalized and placed on the psychiatric unit, for a minimum of 72 hours, for observation. Paula was deemed a suicidal risk after an assessment was completed by the social worker. The social worker observed that Paula appeared to be rapidly decompensating, potentially placing herself and her pregnancy at risk.
Paula just recently announced to the social worker that she is pregnant. She has been unsure whether she wanted to continue the pregnancy or terminate. Paula also told the social worker she is fearful of the father of the baby, and she is convinced he will try to hurt her. He has started to harass, stalk, and threaten her at all hours of the day. Paula began to exhibit increased paranoia and reported she started smoking again to calm her nerves. She also stated she stopped taking her psychiatric medications and has been skipping some of her
HIV
medications.
The following is an interdisciplinary team meeting being held in a conference room at the hospital. Several members of Paula’s team (HIV doctor, psychiatrist, social worker, and OB nurse) have gathered to discuss the precipitating factors to this hospitalization. The intent is to craft a plan of action to address Paula's noncompliance with her medications, increased paranoia, and the pregnancy.
Click one the above images to begin the conversation.
Physician
Dialogue 1
Paula is a complicated patient, and she presents with a complicated situation. She is HIV positive, has Hepatitis C, and multiple foot ulcers that can be debilitating at times. Paula has always been inconsistent with her HIV meds—no matter how often I explain the need for consistent compliance in order to maintain her health. Paula has exhibited a lack of insight into her medical conditions and the need to follow instructions. Frankly, I was astonished an.
artsArticleCircling Round Vitruvius, Linear Perspectiv.docxssusera34210
arts
Article
Circling Round Vitruvius, Linear Perspective, and the
Design of Roman Wall Painting
Jocelyn Penny Small †
Department of Art History, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA; [email protected]
† Mail: 890 West End Avenue, Apartment 4C, New York, NY 10025-3520, USA.
Received: 1 April 2019; Accepted: 2 September 2019; Published: 14 September 2019
����������
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Abstract: Many scholars believe that linear perspective existed in classical antiquity, but a fresh
examination of two key texts in Vitruvius shows that 1.2.2 is about modularity and symmetria,
while 7.Pr.11 describes shading (skiagraphia). Moreover, these new interpretations are firmly based on
the classical understanding of optics and the history of painting (e.g., Pliny the Elder). A third text
(Philostratus, Imagines 1.4.2) suggests that the design of Roman wall painting depends on concentric
circles. Philostratus’ system is then used to successfully make facsimiles of five walls, representing
Styles II, III, and IV of Roman wall painting. Hence, linear perspective and its relatives, such as
Panofsky’s vanishing vertical axis, should not be imposed retrospectively where they never existed.
Keywords: linear perspective; skenographia; skiagraphia; Greek and Roman painting; Roman fresco;
Vitruvius; Philostratus
Two systems for designing Pompeian wall paintings have dominated modern scholarship: a
one- or center-point perspective and a vanishing vertical axis.1 Neither method works for all the
variations seen on the walls of Styles II–IV. The vanishing vertical axis is considered a precursor of
linear perspective, whereas center-point construction is a form of linear perspective. Many scholars
believe that linear perspective was invented by the Greeks, only to be forgotten during the Middle
Ages and “reinvented” in the Renaissance.2 In contrast, I propose that linear perspective was not
known in any form in antiquity but, rather, was an invention of the Renaissance, which also created its
putative ancient pedigree.
1. Background
1.1. Definitions
First, it is important to define four key terms.
“Perspective” applies loosely to a wide range of systems that convert a three-dimensional scene
to two dimensions. Most scholars, however, mean “linear perspective” when they use the unqualified
term “perspective”. No standard definition exists for linear perspective, but only linear perspective
obeys the rules of projective geometry. Formal definitions refer to “station points” (the point or
place for the “eye” of the “viewer” and/or “artist”), vanishing points, horizon lines, and picture
planes, among other aspects. Horizontal lines converge to the “center point” or, in the case of
1 This topic is remarkably complex with a massive bibliography. Small (2013) provides a reasonable summary of the
scholarship to its date of publication. Since then, I have realized that the standard interpretations of key texts and objects
needs to be totally rethought. This artic.
Artists are often involved in national social movements that result .docxssusera34210
Artists are often involved in national social movements that result in the transformation not only of the art world, but also of society at large. Discuss the transformations that occurred as a result of any of the following civil rights movements (African American, Chicano/a, Native American, gay/lesbian) or the feminist movement. Use a specific example of a work of art in your discussion.
.
Article ReviewThe Role of Nicotine Dependence in E-Cigarettes’.docxssusera34210
Article Review
The Role of Nicotine Dependence in E-Cigarettes’ Potential for Smoking Reduction
. (2018).
Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 20
(10), 1272–1277.
In APA, 6th ed. format, review this article to include a summary of the article followed by a critique. Use the
rubric
as a guide.
The review should be 2-3 pages, 12-point Arial font, double-spaced with 1-inch margins.
.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
This is a presentation by Dada Robert in a Your Skill Boost masterclass organised by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan (EFSS) on Saturday, the 25th and Sunday, the 26th of May 2024.
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The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
How to Create Map Views in the Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
The map views are useful for providing a geographical representation of data. They allow users to visualize and analyze the data in a more intuitive manner.
ARTS 1301 Art Appreciation Class North Lake College .docx
1. ARTS 1301
Art Appreciation Class
North Lake College
Museum Critical Review Assignment and Worksheet
CRITICAL THINKING AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
VALUE RUBRIC
I hope you are inspired by your visit. Please remember to not
use a flash with your cameras. Ask
before taking a photo, and no CELL PHONE usage during your
visits unless you are participating
in the media challenges at the museums (points program).
Remember that all art is precious, so
stay 12 inches away from the art, walls and art cases, please.
This assignment is designed to
meet both Communication and Social Responsibility Student
Learning Objectives.
There are 2 parts to your Museum Critical Review assignment to
be completed
after visiting one or more of the following museums*:
2. can Art
www.cartermuseum.org
*Not all of the museums will have the diversity of time periods
that you will need to complete the
assignment. You may have to visit more than one of the listed
museums if you choose to go to one of the
more time or region specific museums. Your instructor may
choose to allow only a few of these museums
to meet the assignment assessment.
Part 1. CRITICAL REVIEW of Favorite Artwork-- 75 Points
Don’t forget to find a favorite piece anywhere inside or outside
of the museum. Collect the
information to complete the critical review later.
``````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
The purpose of this review is to critically interpret and evaluate
a work of art. (ACGM guidelines, 2015).
Based on student attendance a museum exhibition in their
community
A critical analysis with personal reflection that demonstrates
comprehension of event.
The date, place and time of the event will be cited as a source
material
3. A minimum of 300 words, typed double-paced 12 point font
Measured with objective standards of Creative Thinking
VALUE rubric
This critical review should be a minimum of 300 words, typed
double-spaced 12-point font. The
assignment will be submitted via eCampus as instructed.
1. Description of art object (100 words) up to 30% of points
earned for assignment________
Write the name of the art work being discussed, the artist’s
name, the date, time, name of museum,
size, description of the piece or composition, and the location.
In the description, create a visual image
with words.
2. Analysis of the art object (100 words) up to 40% of points
earned for assignment________
Based on the description provided in the introduction, analyze
the artist’s intent or message within the
work of art. Provide notated research (inquiry) to further
interpret the background of the artist and the
era in which it was created. The innovation and expression of
ideas of the artist should be better
http://www.kimbellart.org/
http://www.themodern.org/
http://www.cartermuseum.org/
understood through this research. Discuss the Visual Elements
and Principles of Design. Which Visual
Elements and Principles of Design are present in this work of
4. art and give examples. (The visual elements
and principles of design are listed and defined at the bottom of
the worksheet.)
3. Interpretation of the art object (100 words) up to 30% of
points earned for assignment
________
Discuss the content of the piece. Why was it created? Does it
have a narrative or discuss social issues?
What emotional feeling is present? Summarize your reaction to
this art object.
4. PROVIDE EVIDENCE OF YOUR ATTENDANCE AT THIS
MUSEUM. ATTACH OF PHOTO OF
YOURSELF IN FRONT OF THE WORK OF ART IN THE
MUSEUM, OR IF THIS IS NOT ALLOWED, IN
FRONT OF THE MUSEUM SIGN.
Part 2: TOUR OF MUSEUM— MUSEUM WORKSHEET, 125
points
NEW ACGM guidelines 2015:
1. Select 3 works of art in this museum. Identify and describe
these works of art based on their chronology (the time period
they
were created) and style, using the Visual Elements and
Principles of Design as standard categories and terminology.
2. At least one of the objects you choose should allow you to
5. investigate major artistic developments and significant works of
art from the prehistoric period to the 14th century.
3. At least one work should reflect an understanding of
intercultural values and ideas expressed by the creative artists.
Write
a critical analysis with personal reflection that will demonstrate
comprehension of this event and its impact on the community.
4. Analyze the relationship of art to history by placing works of
art within cultural, historical, and chronological contexts by
comparing one piece you have selected from a particular period
to another piece you have selected from the 15th century
to the present.
Here’s a space for your notes to complete your MUSEUM
WORKSHEET 125 POINTS
ASSIGNMENT:
1. Select 3 works of art in this museum. Identify and describe
these works of art based on their
chronology (the time period they were created) and style, using
the Visual Elements and
Principles of Design as standard categories and terminology.
2. At least one of the objects you choose should allow you to
investigate major artistic
developments and significant works of art from the prehistoric
period to the 14th century.
3. At least one work should reflect an understanding of
intercultural values and ideas expressed
by the creative artists. Write a critical analysis with personal
reflection that will demonstrate
comprehension of this event and its impact on the community.
Consider if the impact might be
6. social responsibility in regard to political, religious or
community presented in the imagery.
4. Analyze the relationship of art to history by placing works of
art within cultural, historical, and
chronological contexts by comparing one piece you have
selected from a particular period to
another piece you have selected from the 15th century to the
present.
WHICH 3 PIECES FROM THE TOUR ARE YOU SELECTING?
1. NAME OF PIECE from Prehistoric to the 14th Century
DESCRIPTION OF PIECE
DATE OF PIECE
MAJOR ARTISTIC DEVELOPMENTS
2. NAME OF PIECE that reflects intercultural values and ideas
DESCRIPTION OF PIECE
DATE OF PIECE AND CRITICAL ANALYSIS WITH
PERSONAL REFLECTION THAT
DEMONSTRATES COMPREHENSION OF THIS EVENT AND
ITS IMPACT ON THE COMMUNITY.
3. NAME OF PIECE from the 15th century to the present
DESCRIPTION OF PIECE
DATE OF PIECE
7. MAJOR ARTISTIC DEVELOPMENTS
4. ANALYZE THE RELATIONSHIP OF ART TO HISTORY
BY PLACING WORKS OF ART WITHIN
CULTURAL, HISTORICAL, AND CHRONOLOGICAL
CONTEXTS BY COMPARING ONE PIECE YOU
HAVE SELECTED FROM A PARTICULAR PERIOD TO
ANOTHER PIECE YOU HAVE SELECTED
FROM THE 15TH CENTURY TO THE PRESENT.
Look for these VISUAL ELEMENTS: visual tools an artist has
to make a work of art
1. Line: Lines can show outline, imply a third dimension, show
direction or movement
2. Shape and Mass: Shape refers to 2 dimensions, for instance,
a square. Mass refers to 3 dimensions, for instance, a cube.
3. Light: Light reveals form. Where is the light source? What
is the range of values, from light to dark, in the art you are
reviewing?
4. Color: How does the artist use color in the art object you
are reviewing? Is it the primary colors only? Is it emotionally
soothing or jarring?
5. Texture and pattern: Does the art object you are viewing
have actual texture, could you feel it? Or does it have implied
texture, suggesting that it is smooth or rough? Does it have an
overall pattern on the surface?
6. Space: If your object is architectural or sculptural, it will
have 3 dimensional space. Try to describe the space. If your
object is
8. two dimensional, how does the artist imply space, for example,
through linear perspective, overlapping of objects, smaller or
larger objects, or atmospheric perspective?
7. Time and motion: Does the art object imply time, for
instance, a sunset, or motion, for instance, a sculpture that
moves?
Look for these PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN: the organization of
the composition or design of the art work
1. Unity and Variety: Unity is a sense of oneness in the art.
Variety maintains interest in art
2. Balance: Symmetrical balance occurs when both sides of the
art object are similar in size or shape. Asymmetrical balance
occurs when the two sides are quite different in the appearance
of the objects in the art.
3. Emphasis and Subordination: How does the artist draw your
eye to the center of attention of the art object? How does the
artist make the rest of the painting subordinate to the center of
interest?
4. Scale and Proportion: Scale means size in relation to a
standard or "normal" size. Proportion refers to size
relationships
between parts of a whole, or between two or more items
perceived as a unit. Sometimes these are deliberately incorrect,
as in
Hierarchal Scale in the art of antiquity.
5. Rhythm or repetition: The repeated use of a color, shape or
line to create expression